1 / 24

Bay Sediment Budgets: Sediment Accounting 101

Bay Sediment Budgets: Sediment Accounting 101. David Schoellhamer Megan Lionberger Bruce Jaffe Neil Ganju Scott Wright Greg Shellenbarger U.S. Geological Survey. NASA. A sediment budget describes the quantity of sediment. Entering the Bay Leaving the Bay

imelda
Télécharger la présentation

Bay Sediment Budgets: Sediment Accounting 101

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Bay Sediment Budgets: Sediment Accounting 101 David Schoellhamer Megan Lionberger Bruce Jaffe Neil Ganju Scott Wright Greg Shellenbarger U.S. Geological Survey NASA

  2. A sediment budget describes the quantity of sediment • Entering the Bay • Leaving the Bay • Depositing in or eroding from the Bay

  3. Who cares? • Dredgers: disposal of deposition in ports and channels • Regulators and dischargers: sediment associated contaminants and TMDLs • Restoration managers: deposition needed for restoration without eroding existing habitat

  4. Accounting rules • Where: SF Bay from Mallard Island to Golden Gate • When: Water years 1955-1990, 1995-2002, and a normal water year 1995-2002 • Lifeline: Conservation of mass: inflow-outflow=changein storage • Uncertainty: varies by term, “Not THE answer” – Steve Ritchie

  5. Odgen Beeman and Krone 1955-1990

  6. New information for 1955-1990

  7. Revised 1955-1990 annual budget Units are mass in millions of metric tons per year (~1.5 Mcy)

  8. Revised 1955-1990 annual budget Assume Krone Central Bay deposition is ocean sand

  9. Revised 1955-1990 annual budget Suspended sediment outflow from conservation of mass (lifeline)

  10. Revised 1955-1990 annual budget Sand mining is a very rough estimate

  11. 1995-2002 annual budget

  12. 1995-2002 annual budget Box model used to get change in storage and outflow

  13. 1995-2002 annual budget Assume no change in supply of ocean sand

  14. 1995-2002 was all wet

  15. Normal 1995-2002 annual budget Remove water years 1995 and 1998 where possible

  16. 1955-1990 1995-2002

  17. 1955-1990 1995-2002

  18. 1955-1990 1995-2002

  19. 1955-1990 1995-2002

  20. 1955-1990 1995-2002

  21. 1955-1990 1995-2002

  22. Implications • Sediments disposed of in the ocean may be needed to maintain and restore Bay habitats • The Bay bottom will continue to erode and supply legacy contaminants • Restoration sites will be depositional and may increase erosion elsewhere • Dredging, restoration, and water quality are connected by the sediment budget

  23. Most important and most uncertain terms • Golden Gate fine suspended sediment outflow (model because difficult to measure) • Golden Gate sand supply, 1.2-2.9 MMT/yr (Central Bay bathymetric change) • Eroded mass (new surveys, measure bed density) • Sediment supply from watershed (±25%)

  24. Acknowledgements • U.S. Army Corps of Engineers • SF Regional Water Quality Control Board • California State Coastal Conservancy • USGS Priority Ecosystem Science Program • USGS Federal/State Cooperative Program • Lester McKee • Patricia Chambers and Linda Wanczyk

More Related